NEVER TOO OLD FOR CHEMO
THE OLD RUSTY MAIL
An e-journal for old people
Russell Burton, an Old Person
I ran across this article in the December 2014 issue of the
journal Scientific American. Even though the title does suggest some nasty
thoughts, my take was quite the opposite.
No doubt age especially old age does limit us as to our medical
options. I understand that when a person
reaches the age of 80 organ transplants are no longer available. Now this restriction may change as the
population as a whole ages. In a way I
hope so because at my age of 82 soon to become 83 I feel like a major medical
option which could save my life has suddenly disappeared. In a way one of my life boats has been cut
adrift.
In fact this article reports exactly that age-limitation are
changing with us old people in regards to aggressive medical treatments such as
chemo therapy. Simply physicians are
attempting more aggressive treatments on old people with advanced cancer. And why not for Americans are living longer
lives. I read the other day that half of
the babies born now will live to be 100!
For me that is not hard to believe for when I was a young person my hope
was to live to see the turn of the century.
In the late thirties and early forties life expectancy was 68 years old
and being born in 1932 to see 2000 arrive was not a sure thing.
Of course now, life expectancy is something like 78 for men
and 81 for women so in 100 years yes it could well be 100 years of age. Life expectancy of course means that half of
a population will reach that age.
This article had a different take on this increased aging
thing using cancer as an example. Now,
half of all cancer patients are older than 65 and by 2030 70% over 65 will get
cancer. That is the increase in old cancer
patients will have increased by 40% in just 15 years. Three reasons were given why
old people have so much cancer: 1 – we have accumulated more exposure to things
that cause cancer, 2 – old cells are more vulnerable to cancer and 3 – our
immune system which is our primary biological cancer fighter is slowing down.
Not surprising most clinical medical research is done on
younger people so how well old people will respond or even tolerate aggressive
treatments are not known. Apparently, this situation is changing as medical
research studies are beginning to include old people. This mind set is not surprising as it is just
common sense that old people are supposed to die. Well not so fast…
Finally, physicians are beginning to understand that all old
people are not alike, that is chronologic age is not as good an evaluator of
well being as what is known as physiologic age.
Yes, physiologic age differs greatly among old people. And, I might be one of those lucky ones who
is ‘aging’ slower than many old persons.
I say that because of the following experience I had a few years ago
when I had major surgery on my leg which I have written about before in this
blog.
I was examined by a young anesthesiologist resident a few
days before my surgery to get a handle on my physiologic age although she did
not call it that. Still she wanted to
know how old I was other than being in my late 70s. You know ‘was I going to die on the operating
table’?
To begin when she entered my room she exclaimed “You are
78?” asking in a voice exalting amazement. She was even more dumfounded when
she learned I had all of my original teeth and I was taking only two meds each
day. Simply, she had discovered my physiologic age not my chronologic age and
she was astonished. Clearly, she had not
been around very many old people.
On the other hand my geriatric physician understands
physiologic aging although she never gave it that name. The other day she mentioned to me that I was
in very good health. Then she let me
know that many of her patients are in terrible health. Clearly the bar I had just crossed was not
very high.
In this article I mentioned earlier, physicians have
attempted to measure this physiologic age thing using a Comprehensive Geriatric
Assessment. This measurement takes into
account a patient’s strengths and weaknesses which include such things as
chronic diseases, medications, cognitive abilities, nutritional status, social
support and probably most importantly the ability to perform ‘activities of
daily living’.
Now, we all know what the last assessment includes thus
revealing how multiple biologic systems are working together. Now understanding
that is a measure of a person’s health which of course is a predictor of how
well a person will tolerate the rigors of an aggressive medical treatment. A
specific assessment chart has been devised just for patients who need chemo
therapy and involves 11 specific questions with a resulting risk score of
0-100. A high score of course suggest a
less aggressive treatment is in order.
Of course age enters into the meaning of this score as a
young person might care to undergo aggressive treatment because they
potentially have many more years to live than an old person. Certainly ‘quality of life’ means a great
deal to an old person with not much life left to live. You know enjoy those
years while you can rather than suffering through aggressive medical treatments
just to gain a few months of being sick.
Still old people may want to take the side effects of an
aggressive chemo therapy as documented in this article. The author’s father-in-law who was 91 decided
to give it a go which included 35 radiation treatments but after 20 months he
is a survivor. And, at 93 he is doing
quite well. I am not sure I would have
taken his route.
Certainly as the article concludes ‘…having lived many years
in no way disqualifies you from gunning for more time’. I could not agree more!!!!!
11/14
PS: I am now nearly 85 years old and in those 2 years I have
aged considerably. That is my physical capabilities are more limiting and I
have poorer balance all of which compromises my ‘activities of daily living’.
So, regarding this article I am beginning to understand what it means to be ‘too
old for chemo’.
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